94 SUPER NATUAAL BRITISH COLUMBIA CANADA A MIDSUMMER NIGHT S DREAM SUPE BRITISH t OLU A B AAL A MIDSUMMER DAY'S DREAM Sunset on a guest ranch. Cruises down ocean trails. Fishing lodges. Hot springs retreats. Victoria's English courtyards and Vancouver's magic nights. Experiences that live up to your vision of a vacation. And high exchange rates on your dollar Summer in Super, Natural British Columbia. Classic. Call your travel agent or wnte Tounsm Bntish Columbia, Dept. 915, TOURISM BRIlISH COLUMBIA 1117 Wharf Street, Victoria, British Columbia Canada V8W 2Z2 1-10N PAT JORl>>\N, MINISTER APRIL 27, 1981 was over. Zbigniew Brzezinski became the director of the group. Walter Mondale, Cyrus Vance, Paul Warnke, Harold Brown, and other people who later became officials in the Carter Ad- ministration were invited to join. At the urging of Hedley Donovan, the editor-in-chief of Time, Inc., Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter was added to the list. The Trilateral Commission implic- itly attacked the old Cold War consen- sus in a number of ways. The energy crisis of 1973 made it clear that the Soviet Union was not the source of all crises; there were many problems for which containment and anti-Commu- nism were no answers at all. Relations between the underdeveloped nations and the industrial nations had to be improved in the interests of protecting access to scarce resources and of re- building the world economy. Neither of these interests could be served by viewing political and economic change in the Third World as an arena of superpower confrontation. As Presi- dent Nixon's deteriorating relations with Europe had made clear, Ameri- can-Soviet tensions would split the in- dustrial world at a time when coöpera- tion among the developed countries was crucial to the national interest. Prosperity required the expansion of trade, and that, in turn, required the reducing of tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union. Prominent business leaders became spokesmen for dé tente. Donald Kendall, the chairman of PepsiCo and a friend of President Nixon, became a founder of the American Committee on East- West Accord-a lobby for better relations with Russia that in- cluded executives from EI Paso Natu- ra] Gas, the Control Data Corpora- tion, Brown Brothers Harriman, and other corporate and banking interests. Thornton Bradshaw, the president of the Atlantic Richfield Company, headed the United Nations Associa- tion panel that in 1976 called for a freeze on American and Soviet mili- tary spending. In 1975, Paul Warnke, writing in Foreign Policy, posed the most explicit challenge to the fundamental assump- tions of national-security policy ever suggested by anyone who had formerly held a high position in the Pentagon. I t was a "fiction that protection of our interests implies a global military mis- sion" or that "a failure by the United States to maintain a cosmetic military 'superiority' will cause us political dis- I advantage," he wrote, adding that